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Publication : Mice lacking the chromodomain helicase DNA-binding 5 chromatin remodeler display autism-like characteristics.

First Author  Pisansky MT Year  2017
Journal  Transl Psychiatry Volume  7
Issue  6 Pages  e1152
PubMed ID  28608855 Mgi Jnum  J:255416
Mgi Id  MGI:6114454 Doi  10.1038/tp.2017.111
Citation  Pisansky MT, et al. (2017) Mice lacking the chromodomain helicase DNA-binding 5 chromatin remodeler display autism-like characteristics. Transl Psychiatry 7(6):e1152
abstractText  Although autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) share a core set of nosological features, they exhibit substantial genetic heterogeneity. A parsimonious hypothesis posits that dysregulated epigenetic mechanisms represent common pathways in the etiology of ASDs. To investigate this hypothesis, we generated a novel mouse model resulting from brain-specific deletion of chromodomain helicase DNA-binding 5 (Chd5), a chromatin remodeling protein known to regulate neuronal differentiation and a member of a gene family strongly implicated in ASDs. RNA sequencing of Chd5(-/-) mouse forebrain tissue revealed a preponderance of changes in expression of genes important in cellular development and signaling, sociocommunicative behavior and ASDs. Pyramidal neurons cultured from Chd5(-/-) cortex displayed alterations in dendritic morphology. Paralleling ASD nosology, Chd5(-/-) mice exhibited abnormal sociocommunicative behavior and a strong preference for familiarity. Chd5(-/-) mice further showed deficits in responding to the distress of a conspecific, a mouse homolog of empathy. Thus, dysregulated chromatin remodeling produces a pattern of transcriptional, neuronal and behavioral effects consistent with the presentation of ASDs.
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